That's great news.  Thanks for your rapid testing!

Regarding quarto: most of what I did for embedding rgl in R Markdown just worked in quarto: it uses a very similar system for embedding graphics. There were one or two issues which I believe have been fixed.

I think the next task is getting the multiple-figure situation sorted out.

Duncan

On 18/03/2023 3:25 p.m., Jonathan Godfrey wrote:
Duncan et al., I report success.

The promised text was attached to a graphic, and only appeared once. Not sure 
what the hidden text is about, or why it is needed. (?) so I went and edited 
the raw html (to make sure the alt text is only located in there) and my edit 
is plain to hear.

So there are not two audible versions and the one that matters is in the right 
place. I can tell the second graphic has a different style of alt text and that 
later graphics are separated by other code chunks that do not generate graphics 
(8, 9, and 10) N.B. I was skimming to look for graphics, not reading the 
associated text or code.

 From a user perspective, the graphics created using canvas are 
indistinguishable from those inserted using img. This is an example where 
success in access is unnoticeable to the end user and seldom gets acknowledge 
of effort as a consequence. I'll say thank you now on behalf of the blissfully 
unaware blind readers.

I'd like to know that the effort required by future authors is equal for all 
types of images. The failing of fig.alt to deliver on multiple images in a 
chunk is something to worry about in a different conversation. I'm watching 
this and other issues with respect to the development of quarto documents, but 
in order to test those, I  start with he Rmd performance as a reference point. 
I hadn't tested multiple plots yet, probably because I don't use them very 
often.

I can't address the Shiny issues. I can tell people though that there are 
access issues with some Shiny widgets. These were being investigated by another 
blind R user so I can check how that has progressed. I sense that his work is 
not yet complete.

Jonathan




-----Original Message-----
From: Duncan Murdoch <murdoch.dun...@gmail.com>
Sent: Sunday, 19 March 2023 7:39 am
To: Jonathan Godfrey <a.j.godf...@massey.ac.nz>; R Package Development 
<R-package-devel@r-project.org>
Subject: Re: [R-pkg-devel] Screen reader help request

I've made another attempt at this now.  I'm a bit more hopeful about this one, 
but still not sure.

In the new code, I write the text in a <p> element which is hidden, and use aria-labelledby 
to say that both the <div> and the <canvas> are labelled by that text.

I am quite hopeful that the text will be detected by a screen reader now.  You 
may hear it twice; if so, I have a couple of ideas how to fix that.

I've also thought about what you said about the default text, and have changed 
it slightly.  Now the first plot in the page

    
https://apc01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fdmurdoch.github.io%2Frgl%2Fdev%2Farticles%2Frgl.html&data=05%7C01%7CA.J.Godfrey%40massey.ac.nz%7C8f0eb72383f74148cef008db27e01261%7C388728e1bbd0437898dcf8682e644300%7C1%7C0%7C638147615570986760%7CUnknown%7CTWFpbGZsb3d8eyJWIjoiMC4wLjAwMDAiLCJQIjoiV2luMzIiLCJBTiI6Ik1haWwiLCJXVCI6Mn0%3D%7C3000%7C%7C%7C&sdata=3B9Oapk8PCYTb62K1UBbvHg7DoxdMX3e9ZwRyXFg6CA%3D&reserved=0

will have alt text "Rotatable plot with label unnamed-chunk-1".
Obviously customized text would be better, but I think this should be better 
than nothing.

For authors using this, the R Markdown optional fig.alt setting almost works.  
It's fine if you only have one plot, but if you have multiple plots with 
different fig.alt settings rgl will only use the first one.
I think a change in knitr is needed so that rgl can work out which one you 
really want.

The Shiny support is also a little deficient.  It would make sense in an 
interactive Shiny page to be able to change the alt text in response to user 
actions, but that's not possible yet.  If there are any Shiny experts reading 
this, I could use some help with that.

Duncan Murdoch

On 17/03/2023 7:59 p.m., Jonathan Godfrey wrote:
Hello again Duncan,

I could see the two successes were <img> ... </img> creations and that the 
others weren't.

I worry though that in searching for a solution, you need to end up with 
something that is as simple for authors as what little effort is needed for 
fig.alt; having looked at the HTML, I'd rather know what is happening at the 
Rmd file stage and how anything created there gets passed on.

IMO:  Your reflections on the content of the tags is bang on target. In a perfect world, 
this is where authors' efforts should be, not on the technical "how do I get that 
done" aspects.

I suspect that fixing the toolkit is necessary. A demonstration that a problem 
can be solved is often a first step in creating access. Furthermore, this is 
not a problem unique to your single document. Other authors will want to use 
the same tools which you are demonstrating.

Alt tags are a perfect demonstration of access that does not impinge on 
everyone who doesn't need that feature. Use of fig.cap (initially) and latterly 
fig.alt to provide the access was done at the toolkit level, and it cannot get 
any easier for authors. That maximises the chances that authors do then turn to 
the content of the tags.

I'm happy to assist on projects that lead to positive improvements under the 
hood that ultimately create access without authors having to become experts in 
providing access.

We might take the testing off list, but keep the discussion of access on list.

Jonathan


-----Original Message-----
From: Duncan Murdoch <murdoch.dun...@gmail.com>
Sent: Saturday, 18 March 2023 12:20 pm
To: Jonathan Godfrey <a.j.godf...@massey.ac.nz>; R Package Development
<R-package-devel@r-project.org>
Subject: Re: [R-pkg-devel] Screen reader help request

Thanks very much for your response.

The two images where the tags showed up are regular figures, using lattice and 
base graphics.  There are also a lot of rgl figures, which have HTML code like 
this in the source .html file:

     <div id="rgl61108" style="width:480px;height:296.662546353523px;"
class="rglWebGL html-widget "></div>

(Looks like I should think about rounding the height value!)

All the interesting stuff (including the alt tags) is added within the div by 
Javascript that runs after the page is loaded.  The fact that it didn't show up 
in your reader indicates to me that either it needs to be there before the 
Javascript runs, or that I put the text in the wrong place.  I'll try a few 
variations on the code and hopefully find something that works.

Your comments about the content of the tags was also very helpful.  I am 
imagining that there are at least two groups of readers who might make use of 
them:

     - readers who would skip over the graphics completely, but who would be 
helped by knowing what they missed.

     - readers who can get information from the graphics but only with an 
effort, so they would want to know where to apply that effort.

For the document I posted, there might not be very many people in either group, 
but I'm hoping to make the package useful to others, who would be writing 
documents with different audiences.

Duncan Murdoch

On 17/03/2023 5:18 p.m., Jonathan Godfrey wrote:
Hello Duncan,

I guess a few people might expect me to contribute to your request. First I'll assure 
you that two graphics do have an alt tag which my screen reader is telling me about, 
so in a sense that is success. I did not check with multiple screen readers or 
different browsers because I would only find fault if I used inferior software; I 
expect success with JAWS or NVDA to represent the other and likewise for browsers. 
These two successes are the lattice and base graphics relating to the volcano data. 
Others are not showing to my screen reader (JAWS) and browser (Chrome) on my OS 
(Windows). I note that these are inserted using <img> though.

What should appear in an alt tag is an area of much debate though, and the 
attitude towards their creation differs widely. I believe that the context is 
the primary driver for what should be communicated. In your context, where you 
are obviously writing about the package (in general) and comparison of lattice 
v base graphics (where I do see the alt tags), it is the main text that should 
be communicating with your audience. You know what you are writing and why. If 
you do not write about the differences then you leave it up to chance that your 
(mostly visually-dependent) audience sees the differences that matter to you 
and your efforts as an author/developer. Complementing that information 
intended for the whole audience with a sensible alt tag on the graphics for the 
blind part of your audience, would be fundamentally different to what you might 
need to offer for the same graphics in another context, say an analysis feeding 
into a business report for example. In your context, the
 blind person needs to know that the graphic does appear, and that the graphic 
has a unique (enough) label to make it obvious which graphic appeared where. We 
do not need a full description of every last detail of each graphic, although 
in other contexts, that is exactly what we need.

Generating alt tag text automatically (no human interaction) is going to 
deliver on the technical aspects, without the analytic outcomes, although our 
recent efforts with the BrailleR package are trying to offer more and more 
factual information that could help with the analysis of the data. Our main aim 
is to assure the blind producer of a graphic that it does actually exist and 
what (roughly) it shows; it would not be great text for an alt tag in most 
circumstances. I've done some limited testing with AI solutions but haven't yet 
been overwhelmed by positive experiences.

Anyone using an R markdown workflow can add alt text using the fig.alt option 
in the header of their chunks. Without that, the fig.cap option is used, and if 
neither is used, the screen reader user is victim to their personal settings. 
(We choose whether to be told about unlabelled graphics which used to be 
helpful for ignoring advertising.) I don't put unique alt tags in all of my 
work because I just need to convey that the graphic is there, but I do make 
sure there is a default bit of text that saves blind users with the wrong 
settings from their decisions.


An author wishing to support blind consumers of their efforts, could spend lots 
of time working out what to write, and never get it perfectly correct because 
the desires of those consumers are not homogeneous. I advise people to use an 
alt tag, but to make sure it does not duplicate what is already said in the 
main text of their document. Authors already do this when thinking about the 
right caption for their figures, but it is easy to see how varied that can be. 
At least the target audience of captions is well known to the author given the 
author is part of that population; in contrast, most authors are not blind and 
may over or under-estimate the needs of the blind readers of their work. Before 
doing everything an individual requests, please make sure that what is being 
sought is in keeping with what you are hoping to communicate.

I despair at the retrospective creation of alt tags, especially if applied to 
living documents. Creation of alt tags is simple for anyone using regular 
markdown based insertion of their graphics because the ![]() construct embraces 
them in the []. Authors using a LaTeX workflow must load an additional package 
and add an optional argument to their \includegraphics{} commands. MS Word 
users can label their graphics anytime but of late there is an increased use of 
an automated alt tag creation for them (and messages in Outlook too for that 
matter). I am loathed to fully describe the LaTeX pipeline unless the author is 
also committed to producing their output in HTML as I have utter contempt for 
the pdf (or post script) that is the default for most authors using any TeX 
workflows.

Post hoc editing of html is perhaps the worst possible action I observe. This process has 
separated the creator of the content from the creator of the access for blind people, and 
is heavily reliant on the skill set of the accessibility "expert". Such editing 
is common in university settings where the Disability Support Service is responsible for 
the accessibility. If I was an undergraduate today, I'd be camping outside the doors of 
my teaching staff to get the alt tags inserted. I spent plenty of time back then, sitting 
in corridors waiting my turn, but so many of the access challenges of the dead-tree era 
are thankfully behind us.


I'm curious though that a blind person is going to benefit much from your 
package given so much of what I read relies on using a mouse, or having the 
ability to imagine the 3d data projected into an inherently 2d 
page/screen/image. In turn, that inaccessibility might heavily influence my 
effort to provide comprehensive alt tags.

I'd be more than happy to continue this conversation, and to do so on list 
because I think there are so many opportunities on offer today for people to 
embrace; many of which will not create piles of extra work.

Jonathan



-----Original Message-----
From: R-package-devel <r-package-devel-boun...@r-project.org> On
Behalf Of Duncan Murdoch
Sent: Saturday, 18 March 2023 8:26 am
To: r-package-devel@r-project.org
Subject: [R-pkg-devel] Screen reader help request

I received a request a few days ago to add alt text to the plots in the HTML 
vignettes for the rgl package.

That was easy to do, and I did it, but realized most of the graphics that rgl produces are 
not in <img> format, they are WebGL canvases, and those don't support the same method 
of adding alternate text.  Online I've seen a variety of suggestions about how to do it for 
<canvas> elements, and have implemented one of them.

Could I ask someone who is familiar with one or more screen readers to test 
whether the method that I used works?  A sample web page produced with the new 
code is here:

https://apc01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fdmu
r%2F&data=05%7C01%7CA.J.Godfrey%40massey.ac.nz%7C8f0eb72383f74148cef0
08db27e01261%7C388728e1bbd0437898dcf8682e644300%7C1%7C0%7C63814761557
0986760%7CUnknown%7CTWFpbGZsb3d8eyJWIjoiMC4wLjAwMDAiLCJQIjoiV2luMzIiL
CJBTiI6Ik1haWwiLCJXVCI6Mn0%3D%7C3000%7C%7C%7C&sdata=6O%2BFOsnLvWvYHVE
ElsNJ0cCbVcs1N33xHsv8YAjHf%2FE%3D&reserved=0
doch.github.io%2Frgl%2Fdev%2Farticles%2Frgl.html&data=05%7C01%7CA.J.G
o
dfrey%40massey.ac.nz%7Cc0745ee90c414eebafa508db273e28e6%7C388728e1bbd
0
437898dcf8682e644300%7C1%7C0%7C638146920163482319%7CUnknown%7CTWFpbGZ
s
b3d8eyJWIjoiMC4wLjAwMDAiLCJQIjoiV2luMzIiLCJBTiI6Ik1haWwiLCJXVCI6Mn0%3
D
%7C3000%7C%7C%7C&sdata=tgPjXHerM93yrUrb963Tsa1MwsY7AKbFzaAFP8ZRYc8%3D
&
reserved=0

The very first graphic is a plot of the iris data, and it should have alt text reading 
"rglwidget in chunk unnamed-chunk-1".

That was default text generated without user input, users could put whatever 
they wanted there instead.

Some related questions:

     - Could you suggest better default text to use?

     - Could you suggest good custom text for this particular graphic?

     - The text is inserted when some Javascript has run to initialize the 
page, so if the Javascript fails, there'll be no alt text.  Is that a 
reasonable limitation?

Duncan Murdoch

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